Get fully immersed in art at the WNDR Museum in Boston

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The manner that people usually visit museums is being challenged by this art museum.

Visitors can touch and play with almost everything in the WNDR Museum in Boston in addition to simply looking around.

There are 20 interactive art displays throughout the immersive experience. Every sense is involved in the experience, from screens that bring to life vibrant images to hearing voice recordings on vintage telephones.

Explore the museum’s interior below.

See what’s inside Boston’s WNDR Museum!#wndr #fyp#boston

Through the use of lights, strobes, and noises, visitors may experience a powerful storm in the INSIDEOUT show.

The attraction is a fully immersive 360-degree video, light, and sound experience inspired by artist Leigh Sachwitz’s early recollections of thunderstorms, which he frequently encountered in a garden shed in Glasgow. According to WNDR’s website, Leigh was inspired by the times when Scotland’s weather allowed for the simultaneous experience of rain and sunshine for up to 20 minutes.

Visitors to the exhibit will witness lightning, raindrops, flashing lights, and intense showers. A warm glow fills the space after the storm event.

Additionally, visitors can use the Magnetic Symphony experience to test their hearing.

The display is an adaptation of the traditional tin can telephone. Each of the ten sections that make up the wire sculptures has a separate sound encoded into it. Holding the can to your ear allows you to hear noises using an electromagnetic receiver located at the bottom of each can.

Visitors can also visit the miracle berry sampling station if they like to confound their taste buds.

A freeze-dried miracle berry, which turns sour foods pleasant, is available for consumption at this booth. Guests can consume a lemon wedge and a sour gummy candy after the berry has dissolved on their tongues, only to discover that the sour delicacies taste sweet.

Visitors can leave a self-portrait at the museum before leaving. Visitors have the option to have a high-resolution picture of their iris taken, which will be added to the museum’s collection.

The address of the WNDR Museum is 500 Washington St. in Boston. It is open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Sunday through Thursday and from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Friday and Saturday.

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